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Dive into the research topics where Meredith L. Akins is active.

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Featured researches published by Meredith L. Akins.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Cervical Remodeling during Pregnancy and Parturition

Brenda Timmons; Meredith L. Akins; Mala Mahendroo

Appropriate and timely cervical remodeling is key for successful birth. Premature cervical opening can result in preterm birth which occurs in 12.5% of pregnancies. Research focused on the mechanisms of term and preterm cervical remodeling is essential to prevent prematurity. This review highlights recent findings that better define molecular processes driving progressive disorganization of the cervical extracellular matrix. This includes studies that redefine the role of immune cells and identify diverse functions of the cervical epithelia and hyaluronan in remodeling. New investigations proposing that infection-induced premature cervical remodeling is distinct from the normal process are presented. Recent advances in our understanding of term and preterm cervical remodeling provide new directions for investigation and compel investigators to reevaluate currently accepted models.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

A compact fiber-optic SHG scanning endomicroscope and its application to visualize cervical remodeling during pregnancy

Yuying Zhang; Meredith L. Akins; Kartikeya Murari; Jiefeng Xi; Ming Jun Li; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Mala Mahendroo; Xingde Li

We report the development of an all-fiber-optic scanning endomicroscope capable of high-resolution second harmonic generation (SHG) imaging of biological tissues and demonstrate its utility for monitoring the remodeling of cervical collagen during gestation in mice. The endomicroscope has an overall 2.0 mm diameter and consists of a single customized double-clad fiber, a compact rapid two-dimensional beam scanner, and a miniature compound objective lens for excitation beam delivery, scanning, focusing, and efficient SHG signal collection. Endomicroscopic SHG images of murine cervical tissue sections at different stages of normal pregnancy reveal progressive, quantifiable changes in cervical collagen morphology with resolution similar to that of bench-top SHG microscopy. SHG endomicroscopic imaging of ex vivo murine and human cervical tissues through intact epithelium has also been performed. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of SHG endomicroscopy technology for staging normal pregnancy, and suggest its potential application as a minimally invasive tool for clinical assessment of abnormal cervical remodeling associated with preterm birth.


Biology of Reproduction | 2011

Cervical Softening During Pregnancy-Regulated Changes in Collagen Cross-Linking and Composition of Matricellular Proteins in the Mouse

Meredith L. Akins; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Ruud A. Bank; Mala Mahendroo

A greater understanding of the parturition process is essential in the prevention of preterm birth, which occurs in 12.7% of infants born in the United States annually. Cervical remodeling is a critical component of this process. Beginning early in pregnancy, remodeling requires cumulative, progressive changes in the cervical extracellular matrix (ECM) that result in reorganization of collagen fibril structure with a gradual loss of tensile strength. In the current study, we undertook a detailed biochemical analysis of factors in the cervix that modulate collagen structure during early mouse pregnancy, including expression of proteins involved in processing of procollagen, assembly of collagen fibrils, cross-link formation, and deposition of collagen in the ECM. Changes in these factors correlated with changes in the types of collagen cross-links formed and packing of collagen fibrils as measured by electron microscopy. Early in pregnancy there is a decline in expression of two matricellular proteins, thrombospondin 2 and tenascin C, as well as a decline in expression of lysyl hydroxylase, which is involved in cross-link formation. These changes are accompanied by a decline in both HP and LP cross-links by gestation Days 12 and 14, respectively, as well as a progressive increase in collagen fibril diameter. In contrast, collagen abundance remains constant over the course of pregnancy. We conclude that early changes in tensile strength during cervical softening result in part from changes in the number and type of collagen cross-links and are associated with a decline in expression of two matricellular proteins thrombospondin 2 and tenascin C.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2010

Second harmonic generation imaging as a potential tool for staging pregnancy and predicting preterm birth

Meredith L. Akins; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Mala Mahendroo

We use second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy to assess changes in collagen structure of murine cervix during cervical remodeling of normal pregnancy and in a preterm birth model. Visual inspection of SHG images revealed substantial changes in collagen morphology throughout normal gestation. SHG images collected in both the forward and backward directions were analyzed quantitatively for changes in overall mean intensity, forward to backward intensity ratio, collagen fiber size, and porosity. Changes in mean SHG intensity and intensity ratio take place in early pregnancy, suggesting that submicroscopic changes in collagen fibril size and arrangement occur before macroscopic changes become evident. Fiber size progressively increased from early to late pregnancy, while pores between collagen fibers became larger and farther apart. Analysis of collagen features in premature cervical remodeling show that changes in collagen structure are dissimilar from normal remodeling. The ability to quantify multiple morphological features of collagen that characterize normal cervical remodeling and distinguish abnormal remodeling in preterm birth models supports future studies aimed at development of SHG endoscopic devices for clinical assessment of collagen changes during pregnancy in women and for predicting risk of preterm labor which occurs in 12.5% of all pregnancies.


Endocrinology | 2011

The Molecular Mechanisms of Cervical Ripening Differ between Term and Preterm Birth

Roxane Holt; Brenda Timmons; Yucel Akgul; Meredith L. Akins; Mala Mahendroo

In the current study, the mechanisms of premature cervical ripening in murine models of preterm birth resulting from infection or early progesterone withdrawal were compared with the process of term cervical ripening. Tissue morphology, weight, gene expression, and collagen content along with immune cell populations were evaluated. Premature ripening induced by the progesterone receptor antagonist mifepristone results from an acceleration of processes in place during term ripening as well as partial activation of proinflammatory and immunosuppressive processes observed during postpartum repair. In contrast to term or mifepristone-induced preterm ripening, premature ripening induced in an infection model occurs by a distinct mechanism which is dominated by an influx of neutrophils into the cervix, a robust proinflammatory response and increased expression of prostaglandin-cyclooxygenase-endoperoxide synthase 2, important in prostaglandin biosynthesis. Key findings from this study confirm that cervical ripening can be initiated by more than one mechanism and is not necessarily an acceleration of the physiologic process at term. These results will influence current strategies for identifying specific etiologies of preterm birth and developing subsequent therapies.


Endocrinology | 2014

Prostaglandins are essential for cervical ripening in LPS-Mediated preterm birth but not term or antiprogestin-driven preterm ripening

Brenda Timmons; Jeff Reese; Simona Socrate; Noah J. Ehinger; Bibhash C. Paria; Ginger L. Milne; Meredith L. Akins; Richard J. Auchus; Donald D. McIntire; Michael House; Mala Mahendroo

Globally, an estimated 13 million preterm babies are born each year. These babies are at increased risk of infant mortality and life-long health complications. Interventions to prevent preterm birth (PTB) require an understanding of processes driving parturition. Prostaglandins (PGs) have diverse functions in parturition, including regulation of uterine contractility and tissue remodeling. Our studies on cervical remodeling in mice suggest that although local synthesis of PGs are not increased in term ripening, transcripts encoding PG-endoperoxide synthase 2 (Ptgs2) are induced in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-mediated premature ripening. This study provides evidence for two distinct pathways of cervical ripening: one dependent on PGs derived from paracrine or endocrine sources and the other independent of PG actions. Cervical PG levels are increased in LPS-treated mice, a model of infection-mediated PTB, consistent with increases in PG synthesizing enzymes and reduction in PG-metabolizing enzymes. Administration of SC-236, a PTGS2 inhibitor, along with LPS attenuated cervical softening, consistent with the essential role of PGs in LPS-induced ripening. In contrast, during term and preterm ripening mediated by the antiprogestin, mifepristone, cervical PG levels, and expression of PG synthetic and catabolic enzymes did not change in a manner that supports a role for PGs. These findings in mice, supported by correlative studies in women, suggest PGs do not regulate all aspects of the parturition process. Additionally, it suggests a need to refocus current strategies toward developing therapies for the prevention of PTB that target early, pathway-specific processes rather than focusing on common late end point mediators of PTB.


Endocrinology | 2017

Steroid hormones are key modulators of tissue mechanical function via regulation of collagen and elastic fibers

Shanmugasundaram Nallasamy; Kyoko Yoshida; Meredith L. Akins; Kristin M. Myers; Renato V. Iozzo; Mala Mahendroo

The extracellular matrix (ECM) plays an active and dynamic role that both reflects and facilitates the functional requirements of a tissue. The mature ECM of the nonpregnant cervix is drastically reorganized during pregnancy to drive changes in tissue mechanics that ensure safe birth. In this study, our research on mice deficient in the proteoglycan decorin have led to the finding that progesterone and estrogen play distinct and complementary roles to orchestrate structural reorganization of both collagen and elastic fibers in the cervix during pregnancy. Abnormalities in collagen and elastic fiber structure and tissue mechanical function evident in the cervix of nonpregnant and early pregnant decorin-null mice transiently recover for the remainder of pregnancy only to return 1 month postpartum. Consistent with the hypothesis that pregnancy levels of progesterone and estrogen may regulate ECM organization and turnover, expressions of factors required for assembly and synthesis of collagen and elastic fibers are temporally regulated, and the ultrastructure of collagen fibrils and elastic fibers is markedly altered during pregnancy in wild-type mice. Finally, utilizing ovariectomized nonpregnant decorin-null mice, we demonstrate structural resolution of collagen and elastic fibers by progesterone or estrogen, respectively, and the potential for both ECM proteins to contribute to mechanical function. These investigations advance understanding of regulatory factors that drive specialized ECM organization and contribute to an understanding of the cervical remodeling process, which may provide insight into potential complications associated with preterm birth that impact 9.6% of live births in the United States.


southeastern symposium on system theory | 2010

Distinguishing different stages of mouse pregnancy using Second Harmonic Generation images

Siamak Yousefi; Nasser Kehtarnavaz; Meredith L. Akins; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Mala Mahendroo

This paper presents an image processing approach for distinguishing three pregnancy stages of mice using Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) microscopy images. Three classes of SHG images for day 6, day 12 and day 18 of the 19-day mouse gestation period are considered. A classification is performed based on morphological features previously used for such SHG images, wavelet-based texture features, and a combination of morphological and wavelet-based texture features. It is shown that the combination of the features provide a more effective mechanism for distinguishing the three stages of mouse pregnancy as compared to each separate set of features.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2010

Separation of preterm infection model from normal pregnancy in mice using texture analysis of second harmonic generation images

S. Yousefi; Nasser Kehtarnavaz; Meredith L. Akins; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Mala Mahendroo

This paper presents an image processing system to distinguish a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) infection model of preterm labor from normal mouse pregnancy using Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) images of mouse cervix. Two classes of SHG images are considered: images from mice in which premature birth was caused by intrauterine LPS administration and images from normal pregnant mice. A wide collection of image texture features consisting of co-occurrence matrix-based, granulometry-based and wavelet-based are examined. The results obtained indicate that the combination of co-occurrence-based and granulometry-based textures features provides the most effective texture set for separating these two classes of images.


Biology of Reproduction | 2018

Distinct reorganization of collagen architecture in lipopolysaccharide-mediated premature cervical remodeling

Shanmugasundaram Nallasamy; Meredith L. Akins; Breanna Tetreault; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Mala Mahendroo

Abstract Previous work has identified divergent mechanisms by which cervical remodeling is achieved in preterm birth (PTB) induced by hormone withdrawal (mifepristone) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Our current study aims to document how collagen architecture is modified to achieve premature cervical remodeling in mice treated with LPS as a model of infection-induced inflammation. Cervices were collected on gestation day (d) 15 from mice with premature cervical ripening induced by LPS and compared to d15 and d18 controls as well as a hormone withdrawal PTB model. Second harmonic generation (SHG) and electronmicroscopy were utilized for visualization of collagenmorphology and ultrastructure. LPS-mediated premature cervical ripening is characterized by unique structural changes in collagen fiber morphology. LPS treatment increased the interfibrillar spacing of collagen fibrils. A preferential disruption of collagen fiber architecture in the subepithelial region compared to midstroma region was evidenced by increased pores lacking collagen signal in SHG images in the LPS-treated mice. Coinciding with this alteration, the infiltration of neutrophils was concentrated in the subepithelial stromal region as compared to midstromal region implicating the potential role of immune cells to extracellular matrix reorganization in inflammation-induced preterm cervical ripening. The current study demonstrates a preferential disorganization of collagen interfibrillar spacing and collagen fiber structure in LPS-mediated ripening. Summary Sentence Region specific reorganization of cervical collagen structure in LPS-induced preterm birth.

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Mala Mahendroo

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Katherine Luby-Phelps

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Yuying Zhang

Johns Hopkins University

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Xingde Li

Johns Hopkins University

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Brenda Timmons

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Nasser Kehtarnavaz

University of Texas at Dallas

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Shanmugasundaram Nallasamy

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xingde Li

Johns Hopkins University

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